Geyser Near San Andreas Fault Moves 60 Feet in a Day, Says Report

Officials in Imperial County, California, say a bubbling mud geyser is moving and is now dangerously close to railroad tracks, Highway 111, and optic cables.

The county declared an emergency over the geyser, KYMA-TV reported in October, adding that officials are trying to prevent the geyser from reaching the Union Pacific tracks and the highway.

“That geyser encroaching on the railroad also encroaching on the Kinder Morgan pipeline. And there some fiber optic out there and the highway,” Imperial County Fire Chief Alfredo Estrada told the outlet.

The geyser has been in existence since 1953, said an Imperial County fact sheet about the phenomenon. “In the past 11 years, the geyser has moved slowly however recently the rate of movement has increased and has been encroaching on the railroad,” it says. It’s located about a half-mile from Highway 111 and Gillespie Road.

The Los Angeles Times on Nov. 1 reported that recently, the geyser, which is also called a mud pot, moved 60 feet to the west in one day. Prior to that, it had moved 60 feet over a few months.

Officials in Imperial County, California, say a bubbling mud geyser is moving and is now dangerously close to railroad tracks, Highway 111, and optic cables. (Google Maps)

The spring is located near the southern end of the San Andreas Fault, but it isn’t related to any seismic activity, U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist Ken Hudnut told the Los Angeles Times.

The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) said it has plans in case the geyser reaches Highway 111.

“Caltrans will have to close state route 111 if that mud pot advances to a point where it impacts the state road. We obviously have to divert traffic,” Caltrans Public Information Officer Ed Joyce told KYMA.

While the geyser can produce dangerous gases, Kelley said that as long as people stay “well away from any of its release, it’s not posing a direct threat to anybody.”

Attempts to stop the geyser haven’t worked, LiveScience noted on Nov. 2. The mud pot slipped beneath an underground wall that was constructed by Union Pacific, and officials also tried draining its water but to no avail.

The spring is acting like a slow-moving sinkhole. It has a depth of 40 feet, LiveScience said.

“It’s a quirky thing,” said David Lynch, a geophysicist, to LiveScience. “If there was no railroad nearby, you wouldn’t even know about it. This would just be something out there chewing out the desert.”

The Seismological Society of America says mud pots and mud volcanoes “are geothermal features produced when water or gas is forced upward through soil and sediments.”

“Mud pots can assume a variety of forms, typically being depressions or enclosed basins containing gas seeps, bubbling water or viscous mud. Mud pots can also be water-laden and appear as bubbling muddy water. Mud volcanoes, on the other hand, are elevated conical structures composed of accumulations of viscous mud extruded from a central vent. They range from finger-sized to several kilometers across, though the largest in the Salton Sea area are about 2 meters high. Small mud volcanoes on land, ranging from one to 10 feet in height, are usually called mud cones or gryphons and are usually associated with volcanic and seismic activity,” it says.

Another Geyser ‘Throws Up’

Meanwhile, a geyser in Yellowstone National Park effectively “threw up” 80 years worth of trash.

“On September 15, 2018 Ear Spring erupted and ejected lots of decades-old trash,” Yellowstone officials said on Facebook. The last significant Ear Spring eruption was in 1957, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

After Ear Spring erupted on September 15, employees found a strange assortment of items strewn across the landscape…

“Foreign objects can damage hot springs and geysers. The next time Ear Spring erupts we hope it’s nothing but natural rocks and water,” park officials wrote on Facebook. “You can help by never throwing anything into Yellowstone’s thermal features!”

Said a supervisory park ranger to FourStatesHomePage.com: “You might think that if you toss something in a hot spring or in a geyser that it disappears, but it doesn’t disappear. It stays in that and what normally happens is you can actually plug up a feature and kill the feature. And that’s happened in many places in the park.”

“An approximately 8-foot diameter area of surrounding ground is ‘breathing’ – rising and falling by about six inches every 10 minutes,” USGS experts said in a news release a few weeks ago.

Tourists view the Morning Glory hot spring in the Upper Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, on May 14, 2016. (Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images)

The U.S. Geological Survey’s Yellowstone Volcano Observatory wrote at the time of the Ear Spring eruption: “Ear Spring, a normally docile hot pool, had a water eruption that reached 20 to 30 feet high on Saturday, Sept. 15, 2018.”

“The eruption ejected not only rocks, but also material that had fallen or been thrown into the geyser in years past, like coins, old cans, and other human debris,” it said.

“The last known similar-sized eruption of the spring was in 1957, although smaller eruptions occurred as recently as 2004. As a result of these changes, Yellowstone National Park has closed portions of the boardwalk.”

Grand Prismatic Spring at Yellowstone National Park. The park is dotted with geysers and hot springs fueled by subterranean volcanic activity. (commons.wikimedia.org)

The geyser rarely erupts.

The USGS said the spring has erupted just four times in 60 years, most recently in 2004, LiveScience noted. The geyser is located on Yellowstone’s Geyser Hill near world-famous Old Faithful.

The Ear Spring geyser activity is not linked to the famed Yellowstone Supevolcano that has drawn clickbait headlines in recent years.

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